The
script is one of the most important elements of film-making but
its creator - the scriptwriter - is shoddily treated, poorly paid,
mostly plagiarised, and not given the importance that should be
given. This was the opinion of the panel on scripting for films
and television which was chaired by eminent filmmake Shyam Benegal.
There is a tremendous paucity of scriptwriting training available
in India, the panel which consisted of film maker Ramesh Sippy,
once Channel 4 commissioning editor Farrukh Dhondy, scriptwriter
Rekha Nigam, and former Channel Nine CEO Ravina Raj Kohli.
Dhondy pointed
out that with corporatisation coming into the Indian film industry
the age of films being made without full scripts will come to
an end. "The need for scripting particularly is going to
be felt as without it banks will be unwilling to fund productions,"
he said . "The entire cost and saleability of a film project
can be decided only if a script is in place and besides scriptwriters
need the money to survive," he added.
Scriptwriter, producer and actor Akash
Khurana highlighted the fact that all the major successful films
today were being scripted by the directors themselves. "Ashutosh
Gowariker, Farhan Akthar, they wrote and directed their own films,"
he said. "Screenwriting was self taught and one needed talent
to write successfully, earlier, but we need more formal training
now."
He praised the efforts taken by television services company Indian
Television Dot Com (which runs this website) to improve the writers'
lot with their unique ongoing training workshop Qalam.
Director
Ramesh Sippy emphasized the need for a good script, particularly
the saleablity aspect before scripts could be shortlisted.
Ravina Raj
Kohli spoke about how people prefer not to write for TV and the
disrespect and problems a writer has to face. Hardly anybody wrote
original scripts for television. In fact there were commitees
specially in channels who were there solely to disapprove scripts,
Kohli said, in lighter vein.
Nigam echoed the other panelists and said that the lot of scriptwriters
has to improve and that they should stand up for their rights.
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